Difference between revisions of "CC0"

From Creative Commons
Jump to: navigation, search
(Summary)
(Summary)
Line 18: Line 18:
 
#The assertion that content is in the public domain will be vouched for by users, so that there is a platform for reputation systems to develop. People will then be able to judge the reliability of content's copyright status based on who has done the certifying.
 
#The assertion that content is in the public domain will be vouched for by users, so that there is a platform for reputation systems to develop. People will then be able to judge the reliability of content's copyright status based on who has done the certifying.
  
A beta version of the protocol, including the traditional components of the CC architecture -- legalcode, human-readable explanation, machine-readable metadata, and tools, has been launched for public discussion on January 15, 2008.
+
A beta version of the protocol, including the traditional components of the CC architecture -- legalcode, human-readable explanation, machine-readable metadata, and tools, has been [http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7978 launched for public discussion on January 15, 2008].
  
 
==Demonstration==
 
==Demonstration==

Revision as of 04:12, 16 January 2008

Summary

CC0 is a protocol that enables people to:

(a) ASSERT that a work has no copyright or neighboring rights restrictions attached to it.

OR

(b) WAIVE any rights associated with a work so it has no copyright or neighboring rights restrictions attached to it.

CC0 improves and extends the current CC public domain dedication. Key additions:

  1. A protocol facilitating the conveyance of norms with a waiver or assertion statement.
  2. Infrastructure for internationalizing the tools.
  3. The assertion that content is in the public domain will be vouched for by users, so that there is a platform for reputation systems to develop. People will then be able to judge the reliability of content's copyright status based on who has done the certifying.

A beta version of the protocol, including the traditional components of the CC architecture -- legalcode, human-readable explanation, machine-readable metadata, and tools, has been launched for public discussion on January 15, 2008.

Demonstration

Published Pages

CC0 Chooser

Deeds and Legalcode

Note: View the deeds via the published pages examples above to see how published metadata is used to inform deed display.

Media


How do you get involved?